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In contrast to the prevailing supply-side explanation that price decreases are the key driver of a sales takeoff, we argue that outward shifting supply and demand curves lead to market takeoff. Our fundamental idea is that sales in new markets are initially low because the first commercialized...
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Studying the U.S. personal computer industry from its inception in 1974 through 1994, we address the following questions. What product technology strategies increase the survival chances of entrants into new, technologically dynamic industries? Does the effectiveness of these strategies differ...
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Prior research has identified new firm entry or price declines as key factors that relate to the timing of sales takeoff in new markets. This literature considers these variables to be exogenous and finds unilateral effects. In this paper, we model new firm entry and price declines as being...
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Studying the US personal computer industry from its inception in 1974 through 1994, we address the following questions. What product technology strategies increase the survival chances of entrants into new, technologically dynamic industries? Does the effectiveness of these strategies differ by...
Persistent link: https://www.econbiz.de/10014046814